Case Number 23331

METAL SHIFTERS (BLU-RAY)

The Charge

Opening Statement

From Syfy, a film that follows the low-budget creature feature game plan to a
tee, except dodgy metal visual effects replace dodgy reptilian visual
effects.

Facts of the Case

In the middle of Idaho (or Iowa, I can't quite remember, but I'm sure the
state started with an "I") an alien life form crashlands and leaks out
in liquid form. The alien's hook is simple: it has the ability to commandeer
pieces of metal and kill humans by grabbing their necks and pumping them full of
space bacteria.

When the alien infects a giant metal golem, s -- -- gets real and townsfolk
begin dying. It falls to Jake (Kavan Smith), an enterprising contractor, and his
ex-girlfriend (Nicole de Boer) to drum up a strategy to defeat the steel
predator.

The Evidence

And that strategy is (SPOILER!) dumping alcohol on the alien.

Metal Shifters is hugely stupid, even for something out of the Syfy
sausage-making factory. That whole booze attack thing is emblematic of this
inanity, culminating in an inadvertently hilarious final confrontation featuring
a doofus chasing a metal arm across a junkyard while spraying it with
pressurized bourbon.

Leading up to this cinematic highlight is the typical hokum: a mysterious
predator offs victims sporadically and an everyman and his everygirl team up to
fight it. There are zero surprises to be found here, the textbook play-by-play
essentially the same as you'd find in any manner of Boa or Python or Gatoroid
misadventure. Just execute the palette swap and you're in business.

As dumb as Metal Shifters is, I'm not going to just be a
player-hater. I've got some love to share. Like the special effects. The
rendering of the killer golem is probably the best I've seen in a Syfy original
film. The fact that the overworked, underpaid animators had to work with
something metal rather than an organic life form helps; robots just lend
themselves to affordable CGI work. As a result -- and this almost never happens
-- the creature is the best thing going. Still, don't get your hopes up for any
frantic Transformers-like action; this robot lumbers around with the agility of
a Winnebago.

The Blu-ray: a clean and effective 1.78:1/1080p transfer joined by a Dolby
TrueHD 5.1 track with a surprising amount of low-bass rumble and a
behind-the-scenes featurette.